Showing posts with label Belarus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Belarus. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 January 2012

First Belarus gay video

Video source:



Text via gay.by

Introducing the first Belarusian movie, touching upon the subject of same-sex love.

The three-minute video shows that love applies to all, regardless of gender or sexual orientation, age, race, nationality.

There are two couples, with the gay couple being Vova Maruk and Nick Antipov. The director, cameraman and mastermind behind the video is Max Anatskaya with music by Alexander Maas.

It is noteworthy that all work on the film was carried out in full in Belarus, Belarus and Belorussians. Part of the filming took place at the Komsomolsk lake, other parts in Drazdy. Several scenes were filmed in other locations within the boundaries and outside of the city of Minsk.

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Friday, 30 December 2011

2011 round-up: Part five: Backlash and repression

Manifestação contra Homofobia
Image via Wikipedia
By Paul Canning

I'm rounding up the year in a series of posts - in which no doubt I've missed something, so please let me know what I've missed in the comments!

Backlash and repression

A whole new country, South Sudan, was born with a sodomy law and exclusion of LGBT from rights supposed promised to 'all'.

Turkish LGBT groups suffer repeated attempts to legally shut them down and to block their websites.

The increasingly visible LGBT organising in Malaysia suffered a backlash including law change proposals in two states and the banning of events.

An attempt to use gay rights as a 'wedge' issue failed in Zambia as the opposition leader Michael Sata was elected President. Gay rights was also used as a 'wedge' in Zimbabwe, most awfully to divide the Anglican Church leading to Church resources like orphanages closing and children going hungry.

Malawi criminalised lesbians. This was an issue, but a minor issue, in a subsequent aid reduction by the country's biggest donor, the UK. It was mainly the Malawian government's other walk-backs on human rights and a diplomatic spat which caused the UK's change of approach on aid, but it was played up by them as a 'wedge issue' against the opposition with protests against the state of the economy and human rights abuses called 'gay rallies' in state media.

The so-called 'Kill gays' bill failed to pass at the end of Uganda's parliament in May, probably more by luck than design. It has been reintroduced into the current parliament. The bill provoked the biggest international petition drive for LGBT rights ever, well over two million supported different efforts. Activists pleaded for such support to be offered in the context of the general human rights problems in the country, but most solidarity work continued to single out the gay issue from the bigger crisis. Protests against the bill raised, again, the use of development aid redirection from governments and other government-to-government 'leverage' by Western countries in front of and behind the scenes. The atmosphere generated by the bill led to increased government and societal repression of Ugandan LGBT, highlighted by the murder of leader David Kato in January. Three brave Ugandan activists won international human rights awards, including one described as the most important after the Nobel Peace Prize.

There were a series of arrests of gays in Cameroon, followed by convictions including some based solely on people's appearance, not their acts. There was violent rhetoric, organised hunts for gay people using entrapment and the government ended the year proposing a 'tightening' of the anti-gay law.

Anti-gay rhetoric in Ghana's media and agitation by religious leaders over the past few years produced a proposed witch-hunt by a state leader - and subsequent international attention. In the ensuing fallout, local human rights and civil society groups failed to defend LGBT. The year ended with proposals in parliament for further criminalisation of gay people.

Nigeria reintroduced anti-gay legislation which was then extended in the parliament to attack any pro-LGBT human rights organising, potentially fatally undermining HIV/Aids work amongst other impacts.

There were sporadic reports of death sentences for homosexual offenses in Iran but little follow-up on these reports by either media, human rights or LGBT groups due, in part, to issues with verification and dangers to sources in Iran.

Honduras finally acted on the large number of unsolved murders of LGBT in that country, after US prompting. The rate of murders of LGBT elsewhere in Latin America - particularly in Brazil, Mexico and Venezuela - drew little international attention. As did the failure of the international community to support devastated local LGBT in Haiti following the earthquake, though the UN finally pledged a response.

Anti-gay laws were passed or proposed in Russia and in Ukraine. Pro-gay demonstrations in Russia, and in Belarus, were banned and violently broken up - whilst vicious anti-gay ones permitted. Though Russians finally won a European Court of Human Rights ruling that the ban on Moscow's gay pride march was illegal.

There were reports of arrests of gay men in Tanzania, Kurdish Iraq, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi.

The Serbian gay pride march was banned, reportedly for political reasons. The gay pride march in Split, Croatia was attacked, video of which ensured worldwide attention but in the capital, Zagreb, pride went ahead with no problems - and little attention. In Montenegro the government publicly backed LGBT rights.

The fake 'Syrian lesbian blogger' scandal in June created a huge international storm, outraging real activists participating in the revolution there. Local LGBT in the Middle East/North Africa (MENA) region report mixed feelings about the potential outcomes of the 'Arab Spring' for them - in Syria, gays are reportedly divided on participation in that country's revolt. The devastating impact of the Iraq war on LGBT continued to be felt. A new project documented those who have fled to Jordan, but the year went by with almost no media attention to these 'forgotten people'.

A criminalisation attempt in the DRC (Congo) parliament was started then put on hold.

The UK's foreign aid policy relationship to LGBT human rights became the focus of a major backlash following an anti-aid story in a right-wing British newspaper, particularly in Africa and including from some LGBT activists. In a messy PR foul up, the UK was forced to clarify it wasn't planning to remove aid but redirect it.

The so-called 'curing' of LGBT people continued to spread worldwide from its US origins with a backlash in Ecuador leading to closure of some 'clinics' and the discovery of supposed 'conversion therapy' being payed for by Hong Kong's government. In the US itself 'cure the gay' drew both ridicule and outrage, the latter in particular highlighted by a media expose about the suicide of some gay people forced when they were children to go through it and the discovery that a Republican presidential candidate's camp husband was selling 'conversion' therapy.
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Friday, 23 December 2011

Belarus KGB harassing LGBT activists

English: The crest of KGB Belarus.
Image via Wikipedia
Source: Gay Star News

By Andy Harley

An 18-year-old activist at the GayBelarus LGBT human rights project has ignored an ‘invitation’ by the Belarus KGB to meet for further ‘discussions’.

He was summoned to attend the KGB office in Hronda, a city close to the border with Poland and Lithuania, on Monday.

The young activist ‘declined the invitation’, which came 12 days after an initial interrogation by KGB officers.

‘They asked me about the management of [GayBelarus] and some of its members,’ he said, referring to the first grilling, in a statement released in Minsk today. The young activist does not want to be named.
‘In particular, they asked me about the address of the organisation’s leader Siarhei Androsenka. They also offered cooperation with them to report on what is going on inside the organisation.’
Another GayBelarus activist Maksim Haikou was interrogated in Vitsebsk by KGB agents who inquired about the plans by GayBelarus to hold a gay pride in the city, close to the border with Russia.

Also in Vitsebsk, one of the co-founders of GayBelarus who is studying at the city’s university, has been accused of ‘undermining the moral basics of the state’ and promoting an ‘unhealthy lifestyle’ following a conversation with deputy dean of her faculty.

Several GayBelarus co-founders have recently received phone calls from the Ministry of Justice. Officials quizzed them on whether the activists actually attended the GayBelarus founding congress on 15 October.

‘This is a situation I have foreseen – the active stand of our organization could not but attract attention from the state,’ said GayBelarus leader Siarhei Androsenka.
‘We all know in what state we are living. I am calling on the activists not to fear such situations and report on them to the organisation’s leaders.’

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Friday, 28 October 2011

Audio: Interview with Belarus gay activist

Interview with Belarus gay activist Sergey Yenin. Yenin was attending a screening of the documentary 'East Bloc Love' in the UK - he begins by referring to the film.

Interview by Andy Harley, Editor, UK Gay News.

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Monday, 24 October 2011

Video: Very brief gay pride parade in Minsk, Belarus

Source:



Demo location
Source: naviny.by

Gay activists staged a gay pride march in Minsk’s remote neighborhood Shabany on Saturday 22 October evening in defiance of the city authorities’ ban.

Some 20 people marched 40 meters along a busy road in the southeastern neighborhood on the outskirts of the city, holding up rainbow flags and chanting “For Belarus without homophobia!”

The march lasted some 10 minutes. No policemen could be seen nearby.

Syarhey Androsenka, one of the organizers of the march, told reporters at the scene that he was not ashamed to be gay. Gay people should have the same rights as other citizens of Belarus and should not be subjected to discrimination, he said.
“As you can see, the march has not disturbed a single driver or pedestrian,” Mr. Androsenka added.
The organizers initially wanted to stage the march in the Sosny neighborhood located nearby.

Ihar Karpenka, deputy chairman of the Minsk City Executive Committee, said in his reply to the organizers` application for permission that the proposed venue is less than 50 meters away from facilities that are of vital importance to the local community. The official claimed that the march would cause disruption to "pedestrian and even vehicle traffic."

The 2011 Minsk Gay Pride Parade kicked off in the Belarusian capital city on October 11. Music concerts are to be held within its framework on Saturday evening and Sunday.
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Friday, 21 October 2011

Belarus gay activist says British company fired him because he is gay

Alexander Poluyan picture gay.by
By Paul Canning

The Editor of the Belorussian website gay.by, activist Alexander Poluyan, says he was fired by the local office of British American Tobacco (BAT) because he is gay.

Poluyan says he was forced to write a resignation letter 11 October by the head of the company's communications department because he claimed that Poluyan had not done his duties. However Poluyan says that other employees told him it was because the department head had learned that he was gay and an activist.

In a statement, BAT said that he had previously worked for them as a contractor and was employed on a one-year contract and was on probation. They say they knew he was Editor of gay.by when he was hired.
"During his probation period, it became apparent that Alexander was under performing against the agreed expectations and requirements of the job. Feedback was given to him on a number of occasions by his line manager and the HR department, in line with the company performance management policy."

"Alexander was given fair and unbiased treatment during his employment with us and there were no incidents or suggestions of Alexander being treated differently or discriminated against because of his sexuality," they said.
The company says that there are openly gay staff working for them in Belarus.

Poluyan says he received no feedback on his performance and that few staff knew he was gay because although he did not conceal it he did not talk about it until asked.
"I understand that now, BAT will protect there [sic] name and say that they tolerant towards homosexuals - it's expected. I will not dispute the fact that in some countries towards homosexuals humane and tolerant, but the actions of some staff in the office in Belarus, shows the opposite," he said.

"Having 8-year working experience, I’ve never faced a similar problem. My colleagues and friends have always known and know that I’m a gay, I live with my guy and that I am engaged in LGBT-activity. This case shows real position of homosexuals in the country where even employees of the international company, widely declaring about nondiscrimination on any basis, can't accept a homosexual in the command. What should be said about conditions gays and lesbians are who work at public establishments?!" he said.

"Many people ask us what kind of homophobia we have in our country? What are the oppressions of gays and lesbians? Once again I felt this situation and I can share personal experience."
Discrimination at work against LGBT is legal is Belarus, where homosexuality was only decriminalised in 1994 and the state has a history of repressing LGBT organising. Gay Pride has just been banned again in the capital, Minsk.

According to the results of a survey conducted by Gay.by in April 2011, 65.6% of respondents have thought of leaving Belarus because of homophobia. Many LGBT Belorussians have claimed asylum in Western Europe.

British American Tobacco is a FTSE 100 company headquartered in London. Brands include Camel and Lucky Strike although the company has diversified, particularly into financial services. The UK Justice Secretary Kenneth Clarke is a former Director.
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Monday, 17 October 2011

Belarus bans Pride again, as mysterious homophobic leaflet appears in Minsk

P rainbow flagImage via Wikipedia
By Paul Canning

Gay Russia reports that - to no ones surprise - Belarus has banned Gay Pride again.

Organizers are still waiting for an official response from the Minsk city executive committee. However sources tell them that the ban is confirmed.

Last year's "Slavic Pride" in Minsk was also banned by the Belorussian authorities but went ahead anyway and activists managed a very brief unfurling of the rainbow flag - now also banned in Belarus - before they were arrested.

Gay Russia says that it is unclear whether the organizers will try to hold a march without permission.

Gay.by reports that a letter which looks like it comes from the 'Ideological Department of Minsk City Executive Committee' asking 'citizens to be vigilant' during the Gay Pride is actually a fake.

The widely distributed letter, found on many bulletin boards outside blocks of flats, says that officials are asking residents to hide their children because many gay men are alcoholics, drug addicts and pedophiles.

The letter warns residents to "not leave unattended children outside the home in the dark."

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Sunday, 9 October 2011

Europe's 'last dictator' can't pronounce 'homosexuality'

Picture by Ethan Zuckerman
By Paul Canning

The Belarussian gay website gayby reports that Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenkо - who has been described as "Europe's last dictator" - was unable to pronounce the word homosexuality on the first try at a 7 October press conference with Russian journalists.

They say:
After several unsuccessful attempts, he specified: "Well, what you may call it, when a man with a man… homosexuality.”
At the press conference Lukashenkо explained how he had "unwillingly" offended the foreign ministers of Germany and Poland by criticizing homosexual relations.

Guido Westerwelle, the German Foreign Minister, is gay and lives openly with his partner, Michael Mronz. A year ago at a state dinner Lukashenko is reported to have advised Westerwelle on how to lead a "normal life"
"Westerwelle remembers this even now. I still feel guilty – who made me say this? I did not mean to offend him. If he likes this and this is normal for them… But it’s beyond my comprehension. I said this honestly,” Lukashenko said on Friday .
Der Spiegel described the apology as "too late .. and unconvincing."

Lukashenko added:
"As for lesbians, this is the blame of men, this is tolerable. But if men – I do not understand this.”
LGBT are repressed in Belarus and Deputy Chairman Sergey Yenin of Belorussian LGBT rights group IDAHO-BELARUS is currently touring with showings of the documentary East Bloc Love.

In advance of a visit to the UK 15 October he said:
“I’ve been beaten by police, thrown out of my university by the secret police and exiled to Warsaw, but I will not be silenced by the dictatorship of Alexander Lukashenka."

“Gay people in Belarus have no voice, so I’m grateful for being given the opportunity to highlight our cause to the wider European community.”
According to the results of a survey conducted by Gay.by in April 2011, 65.6% of respondents have thought of leaving Belarus because of homophobia.

In June the Executive Committee of the Belarus' capital Minsk banned the display of the rainbow flag, the international symbol of the LGBT movement designed by San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker in 1978.

Last month the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Thomas Hammarberg, said
that Europe needed to defend human rights workers on the continent. He wrote:
The clampdown on human rights defenders in Belarus continues unabated. In early August, Ales Bialiatski, the chair of the Human Rights Centre Viasna and vice-President of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), was arrested. He is still being held in pre-trial detention. Activists who have demonstrated for his release have been summoned by the police and one of them is awaiting trial.
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Monday, 26 September 2011

Human rights defenders need solidarity from all parts of Europe when repressed by their governments

Destroyed Azeri human rights group office
By Thomas Hammarberg

The clampdown on human rights defenders in Belarus continues unabated. In early August, Ales Bialiatski, the chair of the Human Rights Centre Viasna and vice-President of the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), was arrested. He is still being held in pre-trial detention. Activists who have demonstrated for his release have been summoned by the police and one of them is awaiting trial.

Viasna has been at the forefront of human rights defence in Belarus for years. The detention of Ales Bialiatski and the current criminal investigation process are seriously jeopardising the organisation’s activities to the detriment of victims of human rights violations, who have come to depend on the assistance provided by Viasna.

Another sad example has been reported from Azerbaijan. In mid-August, bulldozers demolished a building in Baku where several human rights organisations were located, including the Office of the Institute for Peace and Democracy led by Leyla Yunus. This demolition took place in the evening, despite a court decision temporarily prohibiting the destruction of the building.

As the house was torn down without any prior notification the persons who worked there were unable to salvage any papers, computers or other working materials. It is generally believed that the action was directed towards Leyla Yunus, who has been vocal in denouncing corruption and forced evictions in Azerbaijan.

Rights that protect and enable the work 

The importance of the work of human rights defenders is recognised in international conventions. The UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders lists several fundamental rights necessary for the work of human rights defenders, such as freedom of association, peaceful assembly, expression and opinion, the right to be protected and the right to effective remedy. Many of these rights are also enshrined in other binding human rights treaties of the UN, in the European Convention on Human Rights and in the OSCE commitments.
Yet reports about breaches of these standards continue to reach me. Authorities can obstruct the work of human rights defenders by making it difficult to register organisations or by creating burdensome reporting and financial requirements. Hindering access to funding through excessively cumbersome procedures is another method which is frequently employed.

Viasna, for example, was dissolved in 2003 and has since then been denied the possibility to re-register. Belarusian legislation outlaws the operation of unregistered organisations and criminalises the activities of their individual members – a clear breach of international standards. In 2007, the UN Human Rights Committee concluded that Viasna’s dissolution was a violation of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (article 22).

Denial of right to receive funding 

The Belarusian authorities are now accusing Ales Bialiatski of “concealment of profits on an especially large scale”. They are using information provided by official institutions in Vilnius and Warsaw about bank accounts established in the name of Bialiatski, to which foreign donors have been able to send contributions.

The right to access funding is protected in international and regional human rights treaties. The UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders states that everyone has the right “to solicit, receive and utilize resources for the express purpose of promoting and protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms through peaceful means”.

I know that the governments in Vilnius and Warsaw regret that the protection of human rights defenders’ integrity and work was not taken into account when information was provided to the Belarusian authorities and that they are now trying to limit the damage.

Sadly, this unintended mistake is being used in the case against Ales Bialiatski who is threatened with a long prison sentence. And he is not the only victim of policies to prevent voluntary solidarity efforts for those who suffer human rights violations.

Governments have a primary responsibility 

It is therefore particularly important that the protection of the safety of human rights defenders be reaffirmed as a crucial standard. Whenever this universally agreed undertaking is abrogated in one state, governments in other countries – including Council of Europe member states – must react.

Thomas Hammarberg is the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights

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Friday, 16 September 2011

Belorussian gay leader to visit UK



Location of ( green ) on the European continen...Belarus image via Wikipedia
By Logan Mucha

Deputy Chairman Sergey Yenin of Belorussian LGBT rights group IDAHO-BELARUS will be brought to the UK in October, courtesy of the Shropshire Rainbow Film Festival, for the screening of acclaimed documentary East Bloc Love.

The Australian documentary follows the actions of a small group of Belarusian LGBT activists preparing to march on the streets of the capital Minsk, to show their pride in spite of a government ban and threats of beatings from skinheads.
“I’ve been beaten by police, thrown out of my university by the secret police and exiled to Warsaw, but I will not be silenced by the dictatorship of Alexander Lukashenka.

“Gay people in Belarus have no voice, so I’m grateful for being given the opportunity to highlight our cause to the wider European community” said Mr Yenin.
Following its successful world premiere at the San Francisco Frameline LGBT International Film Festival, East Bloc Love will mark its UK premiere at the Old Market Hall on 15 October at 1.30pm.

Sponsoring the event are the West Mercia Police, who will have a chance to see how the police in a dictatorship treat issues of homophobia and political activism.

Mr Yenin, who appears in the film, will be chairing a Q + A at the screening’s conclusion.

The sixth Rainbow Film Festival takes place from 14 – 16 October at the Old Market Hall Cinema in Shrewsbury.

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Thursday, 1 September 2011

Paper: Basis of claims and background information on LGBT asylum-seekers and refugees from Belarus

Location of ( green ) on the European continen...Image via Wikipedia
By Viachaslau Bortnik

Introduction

Based on official statistics made available to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) by asylum countries, the number of citizens from the Republic of Belarus (Belarus) claiming asylum in 29 of the most industrialized countries in the world, while limited, has increased in the last few years (UNHCR, 2004). The number of cases of asylum-seekers and refugees has grown from 3,291 in 2000 to 6,480 in 2010, peaking in 2006 (11,062).  This trend has generated numerous queries addressed to the UNHCR by asylum countries assembling information relevant to the determination of the status of asylum-seekers originating from Belarus.

The number of gender-related claims (including those based on discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people) is not known, but one can assume that the large increase in asylum claims overall includes an increase in these types of claims. According to the results of a survey conducted by Gay.by in April 2011, 65.6% of respondents have thought of leaving Belarus because of homophobia. The UNHCR addressed matters related to homosexual asylum-seekers and refugees originating from Belarus in its background paper (UNHCR, 2004). The Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada did the same in 1995 and 2006.

No original publications with any scientific data on LGBT asylum-seekers and refugees from Belarus are available yet. The goal of this article is to set out legal considerations bearing upon the grouping of LGBT claimants and provide a review of the relevant material on the situation of LGBT people in Belarus. This article is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim for refugee protection. Neither can it be considered an exhaustive analysis.

Basis of Claims and Background Information on LGBT Asylum-Seekers and Refugees from Belarus
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Thursday, 30 June 2011

Rainbow flag banned in Belarus

Parada Równości 2006 in Warsaw.Image via Wikipedia
By Paul Canning

gay.by reports that the Executive Committee of the Belarus' capital Minsk has banned the display of the rainbow flag, the international symbol of the LGBT movement designed by San Francisco artist Gilbert Baker in 1978.

The use of rainbow flags as a sign of diversity, inclusiveness, hope and of yearning actually has a long history. Some Christians have objected to the LGBT use of the flag as they see the rainbow as holy and symbolic. Earlier this month rainbows were banned at a Catholic school in Ontario, Canada. The flying of the flag for LGBT Pride month has drawn objections all over the World, such as this protest in the UK.

The ban in Minsk is because the rainbow does not have a special 'heraldic registration' in the 'Heraldic Council under the President of the Republic of Belarus' and is thus prohibited in Belarus under the law "On Mass Events in the Republic of Belarus."

Says gay.by:
"In the country no officially registered LGBT organisations which could begin to initiate the process for registration of the flag have been allowed. But if this flag will be registered by another organisation, the symbol is available only for members of that organization. So use by LGBT or their friends will once again break the law by using 'foreign symbolism'."
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Tuesday, 17 May 2011

In Belarus, a LGBT conference held - with no disruption

Jean-Eric Holzapfel, the head of the European Union delegation in Minsk, addresses the conference.
Source: UK Gay News

The first Equality Festival to be staged in Belarus opened 14 May with a large conference at the Crowne Plaza – the third time since 2009 that the hotel has hosted an LGBT conference.

With no disruption, the organisers said the event, which was Webcast live by GayRussia, was “a success”.

“Last year, a group of skinheads attempted to disrupt a similar event we held on the eve of the first Slavic Gay Pride in Minsk,” Sergey Yenin, co-chair of IDAHO Belarus, one of the presenting organisation, told UK Gay News.

Around 100 participants, including foreign diplomats, attended the event.

Opening the conference, the head of the EU delegation in Minsk, Jean-Eric Holzapfel, underlined that support and protection for LGBT human rights defenders is a priority of the EU external action.
“The EU promotes human rights dialogue for tolerance and non discrimination vis a vis lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons," he said.
Mr Holzapfel also congratulated the organizers “I commend and admire your courage and wish you the best success for today’s conference – and all your endeavours.”

Dr Zoltan Bacs from the Hungarian Embassy addressed the audience later and reminded Belarusians that his country will always support those “who are standing for who they are”.

Sergey Praded emphasised the lack of freedom of assembly in Belaru,s explaining the 100 refusals his group, IDAHO Belarus, received from the city hall for the Equality March it intends to host 17 May, the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

And he revealed this his group would be marching on 17 May, despite the ban.  He added that the location for the event would not be revealed for security reasons.

The Lesbian group, Labrys Belarus, later debated the issue of same sex families and propaganda of homophobia.

East Bloc Love, the documentary feature film due to have its World Premier at the Frameline Film Festival in San Francisco next month, was given a private preview by its director Logan Mucha.

In his remarks, Mr. Mucha recalled his experiences of filming in Belarus last year.

The Equality Festival continued with the Belarusian staging of the exhibition Images Against Homophobia by Chad Meacham.  This exhibition is taking place in over 20 cities across the world on the occasion of the 7th International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.  Last week, the exhibition stopped-off at the European Parliament in Strasbourg

“It's a privilege to be back a year later in Minsk to present my images to all those with whom I worked with last year for the Slavic Pride,” said Mr. Meacham who photographed 15 Pride Marches in the course of last year.

Closing the Conference, Nikolai Alekseev, chief organiser of Moscow Pride, reminded those present of the importance of the campaign for freedom of assembly and raising awareness in the society.
“In Russia, a third of all Russians heard about the Pride campaign and this is helping us to raise awareness in the media,” he said.  “Pride is a powerful tool which helps us to exist and be heard by the society through the media.

“There is no way in changing the society if you can’t be heard,” he pointed out.
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Wednesday, 11 May 2011

Update: Poland to offer Belarussians free visas to Warsaw Pride?

We reported a month ago that Polish and Belarusian LGBT activists had asked Polish authorities for free visas for poor Belarussian, Russians and Ukrainians to attend Warsaw's 'Equality Parade'. 'Schengen' visas cost €60, beyond the reach of some Eastern Europeans.

The Polish foreign ministry has told the Warsaw parade organisers that people from Belarus, Russia and Ukraine who want to take part in the Parade 11 June will temporarily be able to enter the EU for free. 

The Polish presidency's spokesman in Brussels, Kacper Chmielewski, said Warsaw is keen to promote civil society in general in the EU's eastern neighbourhood.

Update: Barring a few special cases, the Polish foreign ministry has now told Euobserver.com that it will not issue gratis EU visas to people from Belarus, Russia and Ukraine.

Tuesday, 26 April 2011

In Belarus, LGBT "are not going to surrender"

Sergey Yenin
Source: GayRussia/UK Gay News

Fighting for democracy is a real challenge in Belarus, to say the least. Fighting especially for gay rights is even more difficult. In a country where homophobia is widespread, LGBT activists hardly get any support to their cause. Despite the risk it creates for their safety, they still believe that if being visible is a risk, it is also the only chance to change things.

Last year, the first Gay Pride to be held in Minsk was marred with violence from the police and 11 participants were arrested.

In January, a group of activists formed IDAHO Belarus, a local branch of the French-based LGBT NGO. A month later, they scored their first success with the organisation of the first ‘gay-labelled’ rally sanctioned in Minsk.

Hazard, or change of attitude?

The group is still struggling to get their organisation registered by the government – and some of its members have been pressured to spy for the notorious KGB, the local secret service.

In less than a month, they still plan to hold the first Equality Festival which will include a March to celebrate the International Day Against Homophobia on May 17.

The co-chair of IDAHO Belarus, Sergey Yenin – a young Belarusian activist  who was ‘sacked’ from his university over political activism and arrested at last year’s Minsk Slavic Pride rally, answers our questions.

Q: Only one month after you formed IDAHO Belarus, the City Hall authorised your first rally for gay rights while all previous attempts were banned. Can you tell us more about it?

Monday, 11 April 2011

Poland to offer Belarussians free visas to Warsaw Pride?

The Belarussian website GayBy.Net reports that Polish and Belarusian LGBT activists have received positive feedback from authorities for free visas for poor Belarussian, Russians and Ukrainians to attend Warsaw's Pride Parade.

The tenth 'Equality Parade' will take place on the streets of the Polish capital June 11.

'Schengen' visas cost €60, beyond the reach of some Eastern Europeans. Activist Slava Bortnik said that the Polish Foreign Ministry are "sympathetic to the request and advised me to contact the Polish consulate in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine."

Equality Parade organiser Vyacheslav Bortnik said:
"We understand that the decision to grant a visa is taken from the circumstances of each individual case, but we hope that we will achieve this plan. Now I look forward to the official response from the Polish Consulate, which will inform you of immediately."
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Saturday, 12 March 2011

Video: new documentary takes the viewer to the heart of the struggle for LGBT rights in Belarus

The Eastern Bloc - after the annexations and i...Image via Wikipedia
By Logan Mucha

Often called the last dictatorship in Europe, Belarus is a country where being openly gay leads to beatings and arrests.

East Bloc Love is Australian filmmaker Logan Mucha’s debut feature documentary following the journey of the young Belarusian activist, Sergey Yenin, as he and other activists prepare for a defiant march on the streets of the capital Minsk.
“As a gay male from a Australia, I was inspired by the strength and courage of these activists in the face of their government’s ban on the pride march and the looming violence from homophobic skinheads” says Logan Mucha.
The young director was able to document the personal stories of individuals from countries in Latvia, Romania, Poland, Estonia, Russia and Belarus.  These characters range from activists, a drag queen, a pre-op transsexual and a rock musician, giving the viewer a broad view on the state of LGBT rights in the former Soviet bloc.

East Bloc Love is a co-production with the human rights project, GayRussia and its founder Nikolai Alekseev. The International Day Against Homophobia has also contributed financial support to the film.

The film is currently in consideration for a number of international film festivals and is available for review upon request.

Trailer

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Thursday, 21 October 2010

Sick of inaction, binational husband separated from partner refuses to support Democrats again


By Madison Reed, LGBT Immigration Equality Rights

I have lived and traveled in many different places all over the planet, and experienced many cultures. For the past 20 years, I have been the owner of New Earth Resource Company, a spirit, mind and body wellness store in my hometown of Huntington, West Virginia. I'm also a licensed real estate agent and blog owner who writes for his blog, "Lotus Opening," - a blog devoted to news and information about enlightenment, human rights and innovation, and the inevitable rise of what I refer to as “enlightened capitalism.” I am very passionate about human rights of people all over the world.

Myself and other gay and lesbian Americans like me who have foreign-born partners, need the help of gays and lesbians all over the world to help them spotlight their terrible situation.

"U.S. federal law denies gay and lesbian American citizens any means to sponsor their foreign same-gender spouses or permanent partners for permanent residency. Under the acclaimed family uniting immigration law of the United States, only a citizen legally “married” to a foreign national has the right to sponsor his spouse for immigration to the United States and permanent residency – and that means a heterosexual marriage only.

To make matters worse for me, because my Belarusian partner Dzmitry lives in Belarus, a politically isolated and economically disadvantaged nation outside the visa waiver zone, and Dzmitry lacks strong ties to his home country required for him to obtain a U.S. visa - because he has no wife or children, no mortgage obligation or a good professional job to tie him to Belarus - he has never once been able to visit me in the United States, and there seems to be no hope of that changing unless the discriminatory and persecutory laws against American LGBT citizens are eliminated. In our seven years of relationship, myself and my partner have never been able to enjoy a single day of time together in a country that is not overridden with homophobia. We don't even possess a photo together!

Sunday, 17 October 2010

US grants Belarusian lesbian asylum

The Coat of Arms of BelarusImage via Wikipedia  
Source: Kramer Levin

Jill N. Filipovic and Edwin Hermawan, with the assistance of summer associates Emily Elman and Laura Kaufman, obtained a grant of asylum for a lesbian Belarusian woman. Our client fled Belarus after a lifetime of persecution which culminated in an attack by a government security agent that almost killed her.

Kramer Levin successfully argued that the persecution, threats of violence and physical attacks that our client survived made it unsafe for her to return to Belarus and warranted a grant of asylum. Aaron Frankel supervised the case. The matter was referred to Kramer Levin by Immigration Equality.
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Sunday, 16 May 2010

Belarus: gay pride march violently attacked

1111Source: Towleroad

Yep, another gay pride parade in Eastern Europe ends in violence. This one in Minsk, Belarus.

The AP reports:

"Riot police on Saturday broke up the demonstration and arrested several dozen participants, beating some of them and throwing them on the ground. The organizers said that their goal was to attract public attention to the violation of sexual minorities' rights in Belarus."

Marchers reportedly carried a 40 foot long rainbow flag and chanted “No to Homophobia!,” “Equal Rights, No Compromises!,” “Homophobia is a Disease!” Anti-gay protesters even threw eggs into the crowd of marchers.

UK Gay News has been in Belarus blogging in anticipation of the parade over the last couple of days. They were there when the march finally took place for all of 10 minutes and when it abruptly ended. They report:
"15:08 Minsk had its gay pride march.  For just 10 minutes, 40  Belarusians and Russians waived a 12 meters long rainbow flag for a short march of approximately 200 meters.  They were at first met by a large group of journalists, photographers and TV crew.  But when they reached the first crossing point, they were trapped by several vans of anti-riot police.  Suddenly, the doors of the vans opened and anti-riot officers ran towards the participants. “I never saw anything of the kind” said Nikolai Alekseev by mobile phone.  “They were brutal and violent” he added.  Another participant who did not want to be named said: “It was like a group of wild dogs”.  The march ended with most of the participants being arrested and violently beaten.  A few managed to escape but the police ran after them."
There's remarkable footage of police aggressively ripping the 40 foot long rainbow flag out of the hands of the parade's participants and of the arrests that followed.


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